Miami Herald

Tweet on spare change generates money for aid

- BY LINDSAY WHITEHURST

Andy Larsen is a sports writer, but with so many games scratched during the pandemic he has spent a lot of time digging into coronaviru­s data and its sobering implicatio­ns.

Then, while he was sorting his spare change – some from a childhood piggy bank shaped like SpongeBob SquarePant­s – it struck him: Other people in Utah could use the money more than he could.

His composed a tweet to his nearly 27,000 followers, hoping to quickly find someone who could use the $165.84.

Within a minute, someone offered to essentiall­y double his donation with a deposit into his Venmo account. Then someone else pitched in, and another. It kept snowballin­g as Utah Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox retweeted it, calling the effort “very cool.”

“I figured I would help a couple families with Thanksgivi­ng, or a family with three kids buy Christmas presents,” said the 29-year-old Larsen, who covers the NBA’s Utah Jazz for the Salt Lake Tribune. “I was shocked … within five, 10 minutes we got $1,000.”

Soon he had collected more than $52,000.

Among the first to get on board was Jeff Jones, a 54-year-old partner at a CPA firm in South Jordan.

“I was thinking, ‘We’re not having a big Thanksgivi­ng dinner this year, I can use some of the money we would have spent to hopefully help some other people,’ ” he said.

As the pandemic kept people from getting together in a big way for the holiday, the online effort became a chance to conjure a sense of community, a feeling of being part of something larger.

“It felt like it took on a life of its own,” Jones said. “Man, it’s sure been fun to be a part of it.”

Larsen also heard from people in need. There was someone who got COVID19 and couldn’t work for a month, possibly putting Christmas gifts out of reach. Another who couldn’t pay a water bill. Most were local, several were names he recognized from Twitter.

Larsen is a numbers guy, so he built spreadshee­ts for donations and people in need. The effort has gotten big enough that he’ll need some legal help to make sure he’s got everything in order.

He’s hoping to help with bigger things too, like a

down payment on a car for a parent who can’t get the kids to day care after being in an accident.

The outpouring has

been restorativ­e for Larsen, who owes his career in part to social media but has also seen its ugly side.

“I thought I was perma

nently just bitter, the classic embittered journalist,” he said. “And now I’m not for a little bit. And that’s nice.”

 ?? Andy Larsen via AP ?? After Utah sportswrit­er Andy Larsen found some change in a cup and a SpongeBob SquarePant­s piggy bank, he tweeted in search of someone who needed the money. Soon strangers were donating to help.
Andy Larsen via AP After Utah sportswrit­er Andy Larsen found some change in a cup and a SpongeBob SquarePant­s piggy bank, he tweeted in search of someone who needed the money. Soon strangers were donating to help.

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